The Black Blog

The Designer Jumble Sale - Wednesday 22nd September, London W1


You may or may not be aware that right now it's London Fashion Week ; a maelstrom of shows, parties, tweets, live-streams, 'midi-pleats', 'layering', 'referencing', 'pastiche', 'fringing', etc.

Heady times.

I like to juxtapose the buzz with a sunday afternoon spent in Nandos in the 02 Centre on Finchley Road while my husband recovers from ill-advised sunday exercise over a double chicken burger. (Mine's a single - tis Fashun Week after all...)

In among the catwalks and the parties one truly gripping event stands out. The Designer Jumble Sale (in association with On|Off during London Fashion Week and organised by Abigail Chisman, former Editor-in-Chief of Conde Nast Online) will be home to dazzling range of designer pieces, all donated in aid of the MSF Pakistan Floods Appeal. A winning formula; spectacular fashion at spectacular prices for an extremely important cause.

 

  

 Highlights include:

- a charity auction featuring a burgeoning array of tantalising designer pieces including a brand new Christian Louboutin bag, a John Galliano dress worth £2,000, a Roland Mouret Galaxy Dress (donated by dot.com entrepreneuse Martha Lane Fox), a limited edition David Downton print donated by the Fashion Illustration Gallery and much much more
- an aftershow party, bumbling with Fashion Week folk
- a designer raffle with items worth thousands of pounds
- a vast spread of designer clothing and accessories all selling for a song (Joseph Shift Dress £19, Mulberry Bags from £60, Sass and Bide Skirt £20)
- and ....drum roll ...  a certain something from us at Black.co.uk - our best-selling BrightByBlack Babylon Scarf worth £99.

If you're in London on Wednesday, make sure to pop and pick up a bargain for an excellent cause.

 
Details:

The Designer Jumble Sale
The Church of the Annunciation
Bryanston Street, London
W1H 7AH

Wednesday 22nd September 2010 12PM—9PM

ENTRY FREE ‘TIL 7PM. Tickets for the auction at 8PM and after-party cost £10

Buy Tickets Now.


 

 

Dress Minister


At a dinner on Saturday night I came face-to-face with my very own minister. The Minister for Abi.

No. Not what happened.

When the Rt Hon Ed Vaizey MP told me that he was Minister for Fashion and Ecommerce (AKA 'my minister' as he declared himself), I think I said something like: 'No way. I don't believe you. I can't believe there's a Ministry of Fashion'. My reputation for being gullible could not have preceded me on this occasion, given that we were strangers. I know nothing about politics. He is indeed Minister for Fashion (and Culture, Communications and the Creative Industries ... plus archaelogy, broadband and digitised technology...etc, etc.) - and, impressively, he appears to know much about it.

 Ed Vaizey

It turns out that he is in awe of the British Fashion Industry; taking very seriously the significance of the sector within the British economy (worth £1.6bn in retail terms) and also as a cultural export, whose creative reputation pitches it at the apex of the global stage. Recently he had been invited to attend a NEWGEN event. NEWGEN is a brilliant program that invests in, sponsors and consults emerging designers just as they are coming to prominence and therefore when they most need it. It is organised by the mighty British Fashion Council and sponsored by TopShop while the UK Ambassador for Emerging Talent, Sarah Mower, plays an instrumental role.

Backstage at Christopher Kane, autumn/winter 2010 at London Fashion Week February 2010

(Above - Backstage at Christopher Kane, autumn/winter 2010 at London Fashion Week February 2010. Christopher Kane was a beneficiary of the NEWGEN project)

Mr Vaizey spoke to me of Erdem, Christopher Kane and Browns. He said he was planning on installing a mannequin in his office whose garments are to be changed every six months in strict accordance with S/S and A/W. 'What about Resort?' I asked. Nonplussed, he got up to speak.


Still, what a breath of fresh air to hear an MP speak so excitedly about fashion and to really understand the importance of the industry not just on an economic basis but also on a creative level - for in the world of design it is this that leads often to profitability and not just a stark focus on the bottom line.

Ready, Steady, Accessorise.


London Fashion Week is in full-throttle, so we thought we'd get stuck in to some straight-up fashion talk. We are no strangers to the formula of fashion magazines; Grazia, Stella, Style, InStyle and our (obvious) favourite, Vogue. And all the blogs. And the tweets. And Facebook updates. It's fair to say that we have been driven to this. It is brilliantly infectious.

So, we (and by 'we' I mean 'I' - we are not yet a steaming juggernaut and there is no squadron of FashEds behind this facade...but 'we' will keep saying 'we' because it makes 'us' feel authoritative) came up with little, er, 'carefully edited' selections of accessories that we think go BRILLIANTLY together and that we have of course worn out and about and have road-tested, on the street, in the dales, underwater to insure against guffawing, sniggers or shrieks of 'what the HELL is she thinking??!!!'

'Our' favourite selection is this:

 

We would ask what your favourite collection is if we thought we would get an answer, but you need look only to our Facebook page for the probability of that.